Anyway, here in the greatest democracy in the entire world, we do not elect the president and vice-president by popular vote. The voters in individual states elect members of the Electoral College, who then elect the president and vice-president. All states but Nebraska and Maine have winner-take-all laws, whereby the candidates who win the majority of votes are allotted all of the states' electoral votes. Therefore, in very close elections, it is possible that candidates who receive a majority of the popular vote could lose the electoral vote.
Each state has its own rules for elections and voting processes. The voting systems used by the various states are a decidedly mixed bag, and, with each election, there are problems and controversy, some of which nearly always end up in in court. If you recall the hanging chads controversy in Florida in the Bush/Gore election in 2000, you know that the US Supreme Court elected George W Bush. It seems to me that uniform rules and processes at least for national offices, such as president, vice-president, and the members of Congress, might be a better idea, with the entire country using the same processes, voting machines or ballots, rules for early voting, etc., but that is not likely to happen any time soon, surely not in my lifetime.
So here we are in this year 2012 better off than in 1852, but with a long way to go before we the people are confident of free and fair elections.
Painting from Picturing America.
Besides commenting on American electioneering in general, The County Election records a particular political event. As many of Bingham’s contemporaries would have known, the painting depicts Election Day 1850 in Saline County, Missouri, when the artist himself was running for a place in the State Legislature.Note: I corrected the date of the election depicted in the painting and changed the link to a source with more accurate and detailed information.